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    • Oliver Cromwell Lost His Head Long After He Was Dead
      • Posthumously convicted of high treason, Cromwell's corpse was hanged and beheaded, and his head was impaled on a 20-foot (6-meter) spike outside of Westminster Hall.
      history.howstuffworks.com/historical-figures/oliver-cromwell.htm
  1. Photos of Oliver Cromwell's head, 1911. Present location. Sidney Sussex College. Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector and ruler of the English Commonwealth after the defeat and beheading of King Charles I during the English Civil War, died on 3 September 1658 of natural causes.

  2. This culminated in the 1660 Stuart Restoration, after which Cromwell's body was removed from Westminster Abbey and displayed at Tyburn. His head was placed on a spike outside the Tower of London, where it remained for 30 years, and ultimately reburied at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1960.

  3. Mar 14, 2021 · Oliver Cromwell's influence on England and English history is unquestionable - despite his rather controversial reputation as a savage dictator. But did you know his body - or at least part of...

    • Harry Gold
  4. The unlikely escapades of Oliver Cromwell's head. Exhumed upon the orders of King Charles II in 1681, Cromwell's corpse was ritually hanged and his embalmed head was put on public display but the story of Cromwell's head didn't end there... On 28 January 1661, Oliver Cromwell went to the pub.

    • Cromwell’s Early Life
    • Health and Financial Woes
    • Military Career
    • Second English Civil War
    • Pride's Purge
    • Cromwell in Ireland
    • Cromwell’s Rise to Power
    • How Did Oliver Cromwell Die?
    • Sources

    Cromwell was born in 1599 in Huntingdon, near Cambridge, in England. The Cromwells had been a wealthy family for generations, and were part of the landed gentry in the region. He was descended on his father’s side from Thomas Cromwell, a minister of King Henry VIII. Like most children born in the country at the time, Cromwell was baptized in the Ch...

    Cromwell was first elected to Parliament, representing Huntingdon, in 1628. Though this marked the start of his political career, his success in the halls of power was not matched in other aspects of his life. In 1631, for example, Cromwell was forced to sell much of his land holdings in Huntingdon following a dispute with local officials. In addit...

    Charles I may have reconvened Parliament, but his commonwealth remained a fragile state. In 1642, an armed conflict began between troops loyal to Parliament — the New Model Army — against those allied with the monarchy. This was known as the English Civil War, and it was during this time that Cromwell’s career as a military leader was born. Cromwel...

    Cromwell was among the lead negotiators for the Parliamentarians as they attempted to work out a settlement with Royalists loyal to the monarch. When those talks collapsed, fighting between the two sides resumed in 1648, and the Second English Civil War began. Cromwell travelled to Scotland to lead troops against forces there loyal to the king. At ...

    By the end of 1648, the Parliamentarians had won a decisive victory in the Second English Civil War. After Pride's Purge, in which troops under the command of Colonel Thomas Pride arrested those in Parliament still loyal to the monarch, the chamber was reconvened with a membership that was decidedly anti-monarch. In the aftermath of the purge, the ...

    Cromwell led the invasion of Ireland, landing in Dublin on August 15, 1649, and his forces soon took the ports of Drogheda and Wexford. At Drogheda, Cromwell’s men killed some 3,500 people, including 2,700 Royalist soldiers as well as hundreds of civilians and Catholic priests. His troops killed an estimated 1,500 civilians at Wexford, which they a...

    Cromwell returned to England in 1650 after the Scots proclaimed as king Charles II, son of Charles I. Cromwell would lead a subsequent military campaign against the Scots, including a decisive victory at the Scottish city of Dundee. With the Scots defeated, Parliament re-formed in 1651. Cromwell sought to push the legislative body to call for new e...

    Cromwell died from kidney disease or a urinary tract infection in 1658 at age 59 while still serving as Lord Protector. His son Richard Cromwell assumed the post, but was forced to resign due to a lack of support within Parliament or the military. In the leadership vacuum that ensued, George Monck assumed control of the New Model Army and spearhead...

    The Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, Volume 1. Cromwell’s Legacy. Reviews in History. Mulraney, Frances. “Oliver Cromwell’s war crimes, the Massacre of Drogheda in 1649.” Irish Central. Oliver Cromwell, BBC. Headless story. The Economist. Oliver Cromwell and Family. Westminster Abbey. Kennedy, M. (2009). “Oliver Cromwell's grave comes back ...

  5. Nov 2, 2021 · Oliver Cromwell overthrew the British monarchy and became 'Lord Protector,' but was convicted of treason after he died and beheaded. What happened to his head next is a very strange tale.

  6. Feb 17, 2011 · Oliver Cromwell played a leading role in bringing Charles I to trial and execution, and was a key figure during the civil war. Why does he remain one of the country's most controversial public ...

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